Another Tibetan Self-Immolation as Students Protest
March 14, 2012—A Tibetan monk set himself ablaze Wednesday at his monastery in China's
northwestern Qinghai province following protests by several thousand
Tibetan students calling for education reforms, sources said.
The
self-immolation occurred at a monastery in Qinghai's Rebkong (in
Chinese, Tongren) county in Malho (in Chinese, Huangnan) Tibetan
Autonomous Prefecture, triggering protests by hundreds against Chinese
rule in Tibetan-populated areas, exile sources said.
The burning
came a day after nearly 4,000 middle school students held protests
demanding Tibetan language and other rights in Rebkong and in
neighboring Tsekhog (in Chinese, Zeku) county, sources inside Tibet
said.
The students had been prevented from leaving their schools,
the sources said, with one source adding, “The authorities have
detained all the students inside the schools.”
Rebkong was the
scene of constant student protests in October 2010 against a proposed
change in the language of instruction in schools from Tibetan to
Chinese.
The self-immolation on Wednesday was the 28th by
Tibetans since they began a wave of fiery protests in February 2009 to
challenge Beijing's rule and call for the return of Tibet's exiled
spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.
Prayer-hall grounds
In the latest incident, 34-year-old monk Jamyang Palden set fire to
himself at around 10.30 a.m. local time at the prayer-hall grounds of
the Rongwo Gonchen Monastery in Rebkong, a Tibetan living in exile told
RFA after talking to contacts in the region.
Chinese security
forces surrounded the monastery and tried to disperse hundreds of
Tibetans who had gathered for prayers and to protest Chinese rule, but
the crowd refused to disperse.
"When the self-immolation took
place, there were not many people in the area. All the monks were busy
with prayers inside the monastery," the Tibetan said.
Chinese
police and several Tibetans took the monk to the local hospital for
treatment but fellow monks who learned of the self-immolation brought
him back to the monastery, the Tibetan said.
Details concerning his condition were not immediately available.
Chinese security
A couple of hours later, hundreds of Tibetans converged at the monastery to protest, drawing Chinese security forces.
"Around
11 a.m. or 12 p.m., local Tibetans gathered on the grounds in front of
the monastery and raised slogans. They recited prayers for the Dalai
Lama and remained firmly at the site," another Tibetan exile source
said.
"The local police ordered them not to recite prayers and to disperse, but the crowd refused," the source said.
"The situation is tense."
The
latest self-immolation occurred four days after Uprising Day, the
politically sensitive March 10 anniversary of the 1959 flight into exile
of the Dalai Lama and of regionwide protests throughout Tibet in 2008.
The
wave of self-immolations prompted a call last week from well-known
Tibetan blogger Woeser and senior Tibetan religious leader Arjia
Rinpoche to end the fiery protests, saying that Tibetans opposed to
Chinese rule should instead "stay alive to struggle and push forward"
their goals.
Tibet's India-based exile cabinet marked this year's
March 10 anniversary of the failed 1959 national uprising against
Chinese rule with a statement noting what it called China's efforts over
the last half-century "to annihilate the Tibetan people and its
culture."
Lobsang Sangay, the head of the exile government, said
that while he strongly discourages self-immolations, the "fault lies
squarely with the hardline leaders in Beijing."
The Chinese
government has blamed the Dalai Lama for the self-immolations, accusing
the 76-year-old Buddhist leader and his followers of plotting to create
"turmoil" in China's Tibetan-inhabited areas.
But Sangay said
"the self-immolations are an emphatic rejection of the empty promises of
[China's] so-called ‘socialist paradise'" and the lack of ability to
protest in any other way in Tibet.
"Today, there is no space for
any conventional protests such as hunger strikes, demonstrations and
even peaceful gatherings in Tibet," Sangay said.
"Tibetans are therefore taking extreme actions such as ... [committing] self-immolations," Sangay said.
Reported
by Lobe Socktsang and Soepa Gyatso for RFA's Tibetan service.
Translated by Karma Dorjee. Written in English by Parameswaran
Ponnudurai.
View this story online at: http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/protest-03142012093850.html
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